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The Effects of the Temporal Distribution of Dose on Oncogenic Transformation by Neutrons and Charged Particles of Intermediate LET
33
Citations
16
References
1990
Year
Temporal DistributionNeutron DoseEngineeringRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureNeutron SourceRadiation DoseOncogenic TransformationIntermediate LetDose FractionationDosimetryCell BiologyNeutron ScatteringRadiation EffectsMedicineRadiation OncologyRadiation Delivery RateNuclear Medicine
The effects of dose rate and dose fractionation on high-LET radiation-induced oncogenic transformation of C3H 10T1/2 cells were examined. Cells were irradiated with graded doses of 5.9-MeV monoenergetic neutrons administered either in single acute exposures (30 mGy/min) or extended over an 8-h period at low dose rates (from 0.21 to 1 mGy/min). Although cell survival studies showed no difference in effect with a change in radiation delivery rate, enhancement of oncogenic transformation occurred when the dose rate was reduced. When the neutron dose was divided into three fractions over 8 h, the biological effect was intermediate between that for the acute and that for the low-dose-rate exposures. Further irradiations were made using deuterons with an LET of 40 keV/microns. The dose-mean lineal energy was comparable to that measured for the 5.9-MeV monoenergetic neutrons. An inverse dose-rate/fractionation effect for the induction of transformation by high-LET deuterons was observed when the time between each of three fractions for a 0.3-Gy total dose was at least 45 min. No further enhancement was seen for longer dose fractionations, suggesting that very long protracted exposures of high-LET radiation would produce no additional enhancement.
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